Local Centers

Child advocacy centers (CACs) operate on the fundamental belief that the best interests of the child victim should be protected as the case proceeds through the investigation and prosecution stages and beyond. CACs offer a child-friendly environment where child victims can feel safe talking about it, in the event something has happened to them. Additionally, CACs ensure that the information and therapeutic services necessary to the healing process are readily accessible for these children and their protective family members.

In many communities, other local service providers may also serve on the MDT. In the neutral setting of the CAC, team members can collaborate on strategies that will aid investigators and prosecutors without causing further harm to the child. This innovative multidisciplinary approach significantly increases the likelihood of a successful outcome in court and long-term healing for the abused child, the most vulnerable of crime victims.

Children’s advocacy centers (CACs) operate on the fundamental belief that the best interests of the child victim should be protected as the case proceeds through the investigation and prosecution stages and beyond. CACs offer a child-friendly environment where child victims can feel safe talking about it, in the event something has happened to them. Additionally, CACs ensure that the information and therapeutic services necessary to the healing process are readily accessible for these children and their protective family members.

CACs support and coordinate the efforts of a multidisciplinary team (MDT) of professionals consisting of:

Law enforcement investigators

Prosecutors

Child protective service workers

Medical professionals

Mental Health Professionals

Victim Advocates

In many communities, other local service providers may also serve on the MDT. In the neutral setting of the CAC, team members can collaborate on strategies that will aid investigators and prosecutors without causing further harm to the child. This innovative multidisciplinary approach significantly increases the likelihood of a successful outcome in court and long-term healing for the abused child, the most vulnerable of crime victims.

CAC multidisciplinary teams collaborate to:

Coordinate investigations

Limit, when possible, the number of times each child is interviewed

Provide comfortable, child-friendly settings for interviews

Reduce the child victims’ travel to investigative agencies

Coordinate medical and mental health services

Increase public awareness about the incidence and impact of child abuse

– See more at: http://www.cactx.org/local-childrens-advocacy-centers#sthash.B0olzSc6.dpuf